45 research outputs found
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The ceramic typology of Bagunte
textIn its broadest sense this Master Thesis focuses on a question of far-reaching implications for economic anthropology and social archaeology: How does colonization affect patterns of indigenous production before and after imperial expansion, through the actions and agency of both local producers and colonizers? More specifically, this thesis will ask how the Roman Empire promoted or hindered local production of ceramics in northwestern Portugal after Roman expansion into Iberia. In its narrowest sense this thesis will develop an open-ended ceramic typology based on the ceramic materials from the Civitatis of Bagunte, a fortified hillfort settlement located on the northwestern coast of Portugal. This typology will use comparative materials from other hillfort settlements sites (castros) in northwestern Portugal to identify differences in form and function at different sites and possible patterns of exchange.Anthropolog
Satyre de Mazarin, envoyé à Monsieur le Duc de Beaufort
Moreau3588Par Jacques Carpentier de Marigny, d'après H. Carrier, "La Presse de la Fronde (1648-1653): les Mazarinades", I, Paris, 1989, p. 97, note 6
Satyre de Mazarin, envoyé à Monsieur le Duc de Beaufort
Par Jacques Carpentier de Marigny, d'après H. Carrier, "La Presse de la Fronde (1648-1653): les Mazarinades", I, Paris, 1989, p. 97, note 60Moreau358
Ballade a Jules Mazarin sur son jeu du hoc
Moreau563Par Jacques Carpentier de Marigny, d'après H. Carrier, "La Presse de la Fronde (1648-1653): les Mazarinades", I, Genève, 1989, p. 97, note 60
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Applications of behavioral economics : understanding the effects of Roman conquest on Late Iron Age castro culture ceramic production
Through a comparative analysis of ceramic materials from three archaeological sites, Cividade de Bagunte, Citânia de Briteiros, and Bracara Augusta, this dissertation research explores the effects of Romanization on the production and use of ceramic materials in order to answer three questions: how did Roman cultural traditions related to the use of pottery impact local communities; how did Roman market standards impact local ceramic production; and how did Roman pottery impact the activities of daily life within castro settlements? Located within the littoral northwest region of Iberia, these sites represent three types of economies that are reflected in their material culture. Prior to Roman conquest, castro settlements within this region had their own ceramic traditions that carried meaning and structured the routines of everyday life. However, following Roman conquest, local communities began incorporating Roman pottery into their own ceramic traditions. To answer my questions, I ask more specifically: what influenced these changes, and how did they occur?Anthropolog